Archive for the ‘Beer Journalist’ category

SF Beer Week: Love?

February 14, 2013

Beer week speeds on towards the Celebrator Beer News 25th Anniversary Party, which we’ll attend for sure on Sunday. More about that in just a bit.

If you do the math and look at your calendar you’ll see that Valentine’s Day will invariably fall within the 10 days of SF Beer Week goodness.  Beer is not what it used to be in America, and that means it is more delicious and sharing it can be more romantic than ever.  There are Beer and Chocolate events on the list this year, and a lot of lovable beers, but we still see few brewing traditions the actually honor the romantic holiday in all its sweetness, cheesiness and despair.   We wrote about this last year for Celebrator Beer News:

     Very few breweries bother to make a Valentine’s seasonal, but Russian River Brewing is an exception. Like all of Russian River’s Belgian-inspired beers, this beer’s name ends in “tion,” and the brewery brought kegs of this special beer to several events.

Russian River brewer and founder Vinnie Cilurzo explained: “Tomme Arthur [The Lost Abbey] called me five or six years ago in January with a suggestion for a beer called ‘Rejection’ for Valentine’s Day.” The very next day, Cilurzo brewed the beer, using a Belgian yeast and ingredients he had on hand, including some dark malt, in order to have it ready in time. That’s how Rejection became a beer as black as the heart of whoever has jilted you. The beer is available only in February and only on draft. One thing Cilurzo discovered by holding on to a few kegs was that Rejection ages beautifully. “We’d like to bottle it at some point so that customers can enjoy aging it at home,” he said. But that’s still just a twinkle in the brewer’s eye.

(Excerpted from our 2012 CBN story)

While looking around to find that story, which was one of our earlier pieces for The Celebrator Beer News, I happened to come across an earlier, lovely description of the beer.  It was from the Celebrator party the year before SF Beer Week began, and it was by our friend and fellow beer writer Bill Brand, whom we’ve really missed since his tragic death five years ago.

Bill described the party and gave another description of Rejection (the beer) here:  http://www.ibabuzz.com/bottomsup/2008/02/21/update-celebrator-beer-news-20th-a-fest-with-amazing-beer/

A short excerpt from Bill’s article:

      ” …Vinnie Cilurzo was pouring two Russian River beers, his famous Pliny the Elder and a new one: Russian River Rejection. It apparently will never see bottles or distribution outside the pub in Santa Rosa. A black beauty, indeed: Very dark brown, 6.1 percent ABV, 24 IBU (International Bitterness Units — Bud 13 IBU, Pliny 100 IBU).

Vinnie said he used Weyermann Carafa Special Chocolate Malt, which is malted barley that has been dehusked. Weyermann, the German malting company removes the tough and bitter outer covering before the malt is kilned. Dark malt kilned with the husks on produces bitterness in beer. Delicious, smooth, almost silky taste with enough of a dark malt taste to provide a great finish. “

 (2008 article by the late Bill Brand)

So as we approach the last days of SF Beer Week, cheers to a happy Valentines Day, to all romantics and any cynics who can appreciate another time for toasting.   We’ll be out and around, and happy to raise a glass for love, for the memory of Bill and for the beauty of Beer Week.

We are delighted to be part of the Celebrator 25th Anniversary Party on Sunday. For one thing, many special beers, including the rich and citrusy Celebrator 25th Anniversary Double Pale Ale from Sierra Nevada Beer Camp will be pouring.  The Golden Promise malt and Citra hops we added to the classic Pale Ale recipe make this velvety, sumptuous and citrus-salad fruity.  It’s not exactly like any other beer, but it is in the double IPA family!  There’s a fun collaborative story about being at Beer Camp by all the writers who were there, here on the Celebrator site.   (By the way,  Beer By BART Gail’s “My Funky Valentine” sour beer collaboration with Bison Brewing will not be pouring again during beer week.  The last of that will be served in future weeks at Bobby G’s in Berkeley, we are told, so that’s proof there’s life after #sfbeerweek.  Stay tuned.)

Go Beer Week!

Explore Beer By BART; use our list of some of the San Francisco Bay Area’s best beer places with detailed transit info, so you can get out there to enjoy without driving.

Hop farming and the aromatic side of beer

August 27, 2011

The hop harvest is underway in Oregon.  While visitors to a hop farm were delighting in the aroma, the hop farmers said they hardly smelled a thing. (Wait for the high alpha acid varieties in the later harvest, they said. Some visitors find those hops almost painfully pungent.)  Wish our video of the visit shared the smells!

Last weekend we (“we” being not just the editorial plural, but Beer By BART’s Gail and Steve) went to Oregon for a Beer Bloggers Conference. One highlight was a trip to a hop farm, not far from Portland in the nearby Willamette valley.  We got to see Tettnang hops, a delicate “noble” variety originally from Germany, as they were mechanically picked and dried.  Our video shows part of the special tour of Goschie Farms given by one of the neighboring hop farmers before an outdoor dinner at the hop farm.

Hops attract more than just beer geeks. If you were an aphid, where else would you want to live?  So pesticides are used for professional hop cultivation in most areas.   Growing certified organic hops can be labor-intensive and expensive. The yield per acre ends to be lower. The hops will cost more.

Organic beers had been given an exemption for hops in the Organic labeling law, along with a few other food ingredients. Brewers are allowed to use non-organic hops without noting that fact.  If beers use 100% organic hops, that can be a voluntary addition to the label. This is about to change, at the end of 2012.  Beer brewed after December 2012 will have to have hops that are certified organic in their production in order to be called certified organic beer  The total amount of organic hops produced in the next harvest, a year from now, will be very important to organic brewers.   For example, local organic brewers such as Bison and Thirsty Bear will compete for these hops with larger players.  If we buy organic beers, we will support more acres being farmed without heavy petrochemicals, but until then a fascinating competition will play out.

What about Goschie farms?  As this interview says, they are certified Salmon Safe for their agricultural runoff practices, a worthy endeavor. They have produced some organic hops, but the transition is gradual, and natural conditions are part of the process.  For example, this uncharacteristically cool year on the West Coast did not bring the hot temperatures that help control aphids naturally.

Along with the organic beer movement, another industry pressure on hop farmers comes with changes in the AB-Inbev hop buying patterns.  The giant brewing company will now use more hop oils and extracts and  is no longer buying some hops, including the Willamette hop variety,  grown for them under contract and providing stability to the farms for decades.  Healthy hop plants can last for about 30 years, so ripping them out and planting another variety is not just a significant cost, but inherently wasteful and disruptive to the land.  However, shifts in demand are part of the reality of modern brewing and farming.

The Beer Bloggers Conference itself was a good recreational and educational weekend, produced by a group which has also done wine bloggers events. This was their third beer bloggers conference, and it felt slightly smaller than a critical mass for a conference, but members of the burgeoning Oregon beer community certainly made up for that. (Notably, the second one had been in England, and was quite popular. If anybody is interested, this is the group that plans to do it again!)

Explore Beer By BART; use our list of some of the San Francisco Bay Area’s best beer places with detailed transit info, so you can get out there to enjoy without driving.

From the Memory Book, At Bill Brand’s Memorial

March 3, 2009

Excerpt From the Memory Book At Bill’s Memorial, by Steve.

Sunday at The Trappist in Oakland several dozen readers and friends of Bill Brand gathered for toasts and stories about our friend. We were pleased to see so many of Bill’s readers, as well as his fellow beer writers and the brewers and distributors he wrote about, in the room.

Jay Brooks has written a good wrap-up of the day’s bittersweet sharing of stories and memories at Brookston Beer Bulletin.

Steve took some additional photos … we have put them into a Beer by BART flickr set there. It was a sad day, but with many happy moments and memories, and a lot of smiles. (A few very short video clips will be added to that photo set soon).

Toast To Bill Brand

We’re happy to note that the newspaper group behind Bill’s blog — Bottoms Up/What’s on Tap — has put out the call for new blogger(s) to carry on in his tradition. It will be hard to match Bill’s respect for brewing (and beer drinking) people. Here’s to somebody stepping up and making a goal of continuing his tradition of sustained, sincere enthusiasm for beer and this community.

Cheers to Bill.

Back to the BEER BY BART main directory.

Thank You, Bill. We’ll Miss You

February 20, 2009

Update:

Come join the Bay Area craft beer community as we hoist a pint to celebrate the life of our friend, William Brand.  We’ll gather at one of Bill’s favorite beer venues.

The Trappist, 460 8th St., Oakland

(510 238-8900), http://www.thetrappist.com/.

SUNDAY, MARCH 1st, 1:00 PM

As Bill would have noted, The Trappist is easily accessible by transit, just 4 blocks from the Downtown Oakland 12th St. BART station

Click here for directions

As many of you have heard by now, Bill Brand died in the early morning on February 20th, from injuries he suffered when he was struck by a MUNI light rail vehicle 12 days prior.  (Read the Tribune’s article here).  Bill did so much for so many people.  We know him through the craft beer world, but posts all around the web beautifully show us how many people he touched in his personal and professional life.

We first met Bill several years ago at a beer festival at The Bistro in Hayward. Subsequent to that meeting we saw each other at other craft beer events and venues.  As we got to know him better, we talked often of the importance of encouraging people to drink responsibly and most importantly to pay attention to transportation issues after a round of drinks. These conversations helped lead us to conceptualize then develop this website, and he was the first mainstream media person to announce its launch in March, 2007.

As sad as we are and as badly as we will miss him, we will be inspired by his good spirit, desire to help and include others and his genuine love of the people who have built the craft beer industry.  He was a big part of creating the camaraderie many of us love about being craft beer appreciators.  It is with Bill’s kind spirit that we will continue to support those who create the beer we all love and the people like us who appreciate the art and skill involved.  Cheers, Bill.  You will always ride with us!

Back to the BEER BY BART main directory.

Dave Hopwood from Stone Brewery leads a toast to Bill Brand’s recovery at Schooner’s

February 10, 2009

Dave Hopwood from Stone Brewery leads toast to Bill Brand’s recovery at Schooner’s,

The wonderful event tonight was a contrast to today’s terrible news. William Brand, Bay Area beer writer and formerly Science reporter with the Oakland Tribune, was critically injured Sunday night when he was struck by a Muni light rail metro train near near 21st Amendment brewpub in San Francisco.  He was was walking near Second and King streets when an N-Judah train hit him and threw him into a pole, according to the Tribune, Chronicle and SJ Mercury reports.

Beer industry and local beer community blogger Jay Brooks says that:

… at Bottoms Up, they’re asking to hear from “blogging buddies, commenters and community members in the comments section so they “can pass your best wishes as soon as we’re able to share them.” Let’s do our part to inundate him well wishes.

Bill is a friend of ours, (and a fellow fan of the work of Valley and Schooner’s who we’d hoped to see at this delightful beer and cheese event) so we are stunned.

To your health, Bill.

Back to the BEER BY BART main directory.


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